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DTSTART:20201101T020000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250404T090000
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SUMMARY:“Decoloniality and Southern Epistemologies” with Lucia Thesen
DESCRIPTION:\nLucia Thesen is an associate professor emerita in the Cent
	re for Higher Education Development at the University of Cape Town. She 
	has an enduring interest in writing and the politics of knowledge-making
	\, having worked in the academic literacies field of practice at the Uni
	versity of Cape Town for over 30 years. Teaching and research in this co
	ntext have been over-determined by approaches that work around what Lill
	is and Scott call ‘identify and induct’ principles. Lucia is interested 
	in alternatives that challenge the hegemony of the way research writing 
	and knowledge-making congeal in the imaginary of the formal archive. Her
	 most recent publication is Knowledge-making from a postgraduate writers
	’ circle: A southern reflectory (2014\, Multilingual Matters).\n\nFor mo
	re details: https://events.la.psu.edu/event/thesen/
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><head></head><body><p>Lucia Thesen is
	 an associate professor emerita in the Centre for Higher Education Devel
	opment at the University of Cape Town. She has an enduring interest in w
	riting and the politics of knowledge-making, having worked in the academ
	ic literacies field of practice at the University of Cape Town for over 
	30 years. Teaching and research in this context have been over-determine
	d by approaches that work around what Lillis and Scott call ‘identify an
	d induct’ principles. Lucia is interested in alternatives that challenge
	 the hegemony of the way research writing and knowledge-making congeal i
	n the imaginary of the formal archive. Her most recent publication is <e
	m>Knowledge-making from a postgraduate writers’ circle: A southern refle
	ctory</em> (2014, Multilingual Matters).</p><p>For more details: <a href
	='https://events.la.psu.edu/event/thesen/'>https://events.la.psu.edu/eve
	nt/thesen/</a></p></body></html>
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